Delone Catholic High School is implementing a task force to review dance dress code policies since concerns arose about last Saturday's homecoming dance.

The task force will include parents, students and some faculty and administration, said Katie Mahoney, director of enrollment and marketing at the school.

While Mahoney said she was not present at the dance and was consequently not clear on the details of how the policy was enforced, she said the school decided to make the task force in response to concerns some parents raised after the dance.

Delone addressed these concerns in a statement on its Facebook page Monday.

"Delone Catholic acknowledges the tension and emotions created by the implementation of dress code regulations at the homecoming dance," part of the post stated. "While important to follow the dress code policy, it was not our intention to make any young woman feel disrespected or immodest."

The post goes on to announce the formation of the task force, as well as a "vow to uphold the dignity of the young women of Delone Catholic as we revise procedures for future events."

Parents and other Facebook users commented on the post. While some of the roughly dozen commenters supported the school's announcement, others expressed concerns about the way the dress code was handled for young women the night of the dance.

Mahoney doesn't know exactly what went awry in the situation but said the school is being proactive to prevent future issues.

"We are going to figure out how this situation got portrayed in this way and how we can figure out a better solution so that it doesn't happen again in the future," said Mahoney.

The high school's dress code states, according to Mahoney, that skirts and dresses must be no shorter than two inches above the knee, backs of dresses cannot extend below the shoulder blades and the neckline cannot be two inches below the collarbone. Additional requirements exclude any spandex material and outfits with cutouts.

Mahoney believed some girls who didn't meet these dress code requirements on homecoming night called their parents, who came in with alternative clothes.

The concerns about the dance, Mahoney said, likely arose not from the dress code but rather from the way administration enforced it.

This isn't the first time Delone is dealing with complaints about its clothing standards. The school implemented a prom dress policy during the 2014-2015 school year that sparked discontent among some parents and students.

The policy, which administrators said was designed to prevent students from getting turned away at the door, required the administration to pre-approve each student's dress before the day of the dance.